Rate‐dependent effects of narrative interventions in a longitudinal study of individuals who use alcohol

Author:

Craft William H.12,Dwyer Candice L.13,Tomlinson Devin C.12,Yeh Yu‐Hua1,Tegge Allison N.14,Bickel Warren K.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at Virginia Tech Carilion Roanoke Virginia USA

2. Graduate Program in Translational Biology, Medicine, and Health Virginia Tech Blacksburg Virginia USA

3. Department of Psychology Virginia Tech Blacksburg Virginia USA

4. Department of Statistics Virginia Tech Blacksburg Virginia USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundDelay discounting (DD), the decrease in reward valuation as a function of delay to receipt, is a key process undergirding alcohol use. Narrative interventions, including episodic future thinking (EFT), have decreased delay discounting and demand for alcohol. Rate dependence, the relationship between a baseline rate and change in that rate after an intervention, has been evidenced as a marker of efficacious substance use treatment, but whether narrative interventions have rate‐dependent effects needs to be better understood. We investigated the effects of narrative interventions on delay discounting and hypothetical demand for alcohol in this longitudinal, online study.MethodsIndividuals (n = 696) reporting high‐ or low‐risk alcohol use were recruited for a longitudinal 3‐week survey via Amazon Mechanical Turk. Delay discounting and alcohol demand breakpoint were assessed at baseline. Individuals returned at weeks 2 and 3 and were randomized into the EFT or scarcity narrative interventions and again completed the delay discounting tasks and alcohol breakpoint task. Oldham's correlation was used to explore the rate‐dependent effects of narrative interventions. Study attrition as a function of delay discounting was assessed.ResultsEpisodic future thinking significantly decreased, while scarcity significantly increased delay discounting relative to baseline. No effects of EFT or scarcity on the alcohol demand breakpoint were observed. Significant rate‐dependent effects were observed for both narrative intervention types. Higher delay discounting rates were associated with a greater likelihood of attrition from the study.ConclusionThe evidence of a rate‐dependent effect of EFT on delay discounting rates offers a more nuanced, mechanistic understanding of this novel therapeutic intervention and can allow more precise treatment targeting by demonstrating who is likely to receive the most benefit from it.

Funder

National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism

Publisher

Wiley

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